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Me and Billy the Kid: Ghost and legend of New Mexico's most storied outlaw haunt Journal writer

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LINCOLN 鈥 Having lived in New Mexico for nearly 49 years, it鈥檚 no surprise to me that the state鈥檚 Wild West history lies close to the surface.

Kick the ground, and it comes up with the dust.

Take for example last weekend, when more than 200 people showed up for an open house at the historic Ellis Store in Lincoln, the old frontier town 33 miles southeast of Carrizozo.

Me and Billy the Kid: Ghost and legend of New Mexico's most storied outlaw haunt Journal writer

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Lincoln, New Mexico鈥檚 historic Ellis Store.
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Amy Gauthier, owner of the historic Ellis Store in Lincoln, talks with guests during a recent open house.
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Mike Bilbo, left, a volunteer at nearby Fort Stanton Historic Site, talks with Bob Boze Bell, executive editor of True West magazine, on the veranda of the Ellis Store.
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Lincoln resident and history writer Lynda Sanchez, left, visits with University of New Mexico history professor and author Paul Andrew Hutton and Hutton鈥檚 daughter, Lorena Hutton, in the Ellis Store.
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Bob Boze Bell, executive editor of True West magazine, visits with history writer and Lincoln resident Lynda Sanchez during the Ellis Store Open House.
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Western artist Buckeye Blake, left, talks with Mark Lee Gardner, a musician and author of Western nonfiction, inside the Ellis Store.
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Lincoln county resident Bob Vincent attended the Ellis Store Open House in the attire of a 19th-century Western lawman.
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Journal staff writer Ollie Reed Jr., then a reporter for The Albuquerque Tribune, and Tribune photographer Stacia Spragg-Braude, at the Kid's gravesite in Fort Sumner, near the end of the 2004 Billy the Kid Trail Ride.
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Veteran cowboy E.W. Gunkel, left, trades stories with E. Joe Brown, a Western musician and author who lives in Rio Rancho.

Western historians, Western writers, Western painters, Western musicians, old cowboys, the great-great-grandson of a gunfighter and members of the general public turned out to see what Amy Gauthier, the new owner of the Ellis Store, is doing to restore a building that dates back to before the Lincoln County War, the brutal conflict between competing business interests that made bullets hum here in 1878.

Bob Boze Bell, executive editor of True West magazine, drove from Cave Creek, Arizona, to be at the open house.

鈥淚t was a roaring success,鈥 Bell said. 鈥淚t gives me hope for the future of historic preservation. All the historians told me the event was such a breath of fresh air in the putrid air of the current culture wars.鈥

Western nonfiction author and musician Mark Lee Gardner and his wife, Katie, came from Cascade, Colorado.

鈥淔or me, it was all about the camaraderie between old friends and new drawn together by a mutual interest in Billy,鈥 Gardner said. 鈥淏ut it was not a stodgy history gathering. More like a salon with the Kid as its theme.鈥

Billy. The Kid. Billy the Kid.

There it is. It鈥檚 likely that Billy the Kid鈥檚 association with the Ellis Store drew most of those attending the open house to Lincoln. The young outlaw, New Mexico鈥檚 best known real-life figure, played an active role in the Lincoln County War and is said to have stayed at the Ellis Store.

It was the Kid鈥檚 mystique that pulled Paul Andrew Hutton, distinguished professor of history at the University of New Mexico, and his daughter, attorney Lorena Hutton, to the Lincoln gathering.

鈥淚 was excited to be back in Lincoln and to be once again so in awe of how that town can transport you back to the wild west days of Billy the Kid,鈥 Paul Hutton said.

Lincoln County Sheriff Pat Garrett shot Billy to death on July 14, 1881, in Fort Sumner. But his ghost lingers.

I know, because it haunts me.

High-voltage desperado

In my earlier years as a journalist in New Mexico, I tried to avoid writing about Billy the Kid. Not because the Kid鈥檚 story failed to intrigue me, but because so many others have told it.

Bell has written three books about Billy and illustrated them with his own artwork. Gardner鈥檚 2011 book 鈥淭o Hell on a Fast Horse鈥 is about the Kid and Garrett.

Paul Hutton was the guest curator of the 2007 Albuquerque Museum exhibit 鈥淒reamscape Desperado: Billy the Kid and the Outlaw in America.鈥

Considering all the attention Billy gets, I figured readers didn鈥檛 need me slinging ink at his tale.

Well, good luck with that. If, like me, you are a New Mexico writer who often delves into the past, you鈥檇 have a better chance not writing about drought or the Albuquerque International Balloon Fiesta than not writing about the Kid. The interest in him is insatiable.

鈥淏illy was 220 volts and everyone else was 110 bolts,鈥 said Buckeye Blake, a Weatherford, Texas, artist and Billy the Kid enthusiast. 鈥淗e was quicker than everybody. Everybody鈥檚 scared to death of him.鈥

Blake was showing his Western-themed artwork at the open house, as was Bell. I鈥檝e known Bell, Gardner and Paul Hutton for years, but I had never met Blake prior to last week鈥檚 event.

Never mind that. Minutes after shaking hands, Blake and I were like old friends, and he was telling me a story about what happened to one of Billy鈥檚 favorite horses.

Lori Goodloe, president of the Billy the Kid Outlaw Gang, an organization founded in 1987 to preserve, protect and promote the true history of the Kid in New Mexico, attended the open house.

Goodloe lives in Phoenix, but is often in Lincoln.

鈥淚t鈥檚 my second home,鈥 she said. Goodloe wrote and photographed 鈥淥n the Trail of Billy the Kid,鈥 a photographic life of the Kid in New Mexico.

鈥淲hen I was a kid, I just assumed he was a bank robber and a murderer,鈥 Goodloe said. 鈥淏ut then I read a WPA (Works Progress Administration) interview with a woman who said she knew Billy and let him play with her children. It made me think there might be more to him.鈥

Riding Billy鈥檚 trail

Steve Sederwall is the author of a book recounting his cold-case investigation of the two killings the Kid committed while escaping from the Lincoln County Courthouse jail on April 28, 1881. He was standing in one of the main rooms of the Ellis Store during the open house.

鈥淚 reckon every name in the Lincoln County War has been in this room,鈥 he said.

A short time later, Bryan Regan, a contractor who builds roads in West Texas, showed up. Regan鈥檚 great-great-grandfather, George Coe, fought on the same side as the Kid during the Lincoln County War. A ricocheting bullet cost Coe his trigger finger in the Blazer鈥檚 Mill shootout on April 4, 1878.

See what I mean about New Mexico鈥檚 frontier history being close to the surface. There are people walking around today with close ties to those wild and woolly times.

I finally gave up the notion of not writing about Billy.

In 2004, 2005 and 2006, when I was a reporter for The Albuquerque Tribune, I rode the Billy the Kid Trail Ride, a 130- to 167-mile (depending on the route) horseback ride from Lincoln to Fort Sumner. The idea was to follow, as best as possible, the Kid鈥檚 trail following his 1881 escape from the Lincoln County Courthouse.

Riders would set out in April, on or close to the date of Billy鈥檚 breakout. April 2005 was cold, wet and windy. We camped the first night in the Capitan Gap and wondered if we would get blown out of there before we froze to death.

I wrote about those trail rides for The Tribune and Western Horseman magazine. And here I am 20 years later, writing about Billy the Kid for the Journal.

Ellis Store owner Gauthier is a native of Louisiana who worked in corporate spa management in Utah. She was prompted to purchase the historic Lincoln building by stories her maternal grandfather told her about Billy the Kid. She plans to make rooms in the old building available for vacation rental and perhaps turn it into an event center.

鈥淚 came here from Salt Lake City, horns honking, sirens screaming,鈥 she said. 鈥淗ere at night, when there are no cars, it is so quiet. That鈥檚 when I feel close to the history.鈥

I know what she means.

The night before the start of the 2004 Billy the Kid Trail Ride, several of us spread our blankets behind the Lincoln County Courthouse, where the horses were corralled. We slept under the stars, just yards from where the Kid killed deputies James W. Bell and Bob Olinger during his escape.

Did I feel the presence of Billy鈥檚 ghost that night? You bet. Sometimes I still do.